Variations of the Earth's surface temperature for :

Figure 1a: Variations of the Earth’s surface temperature over the last 140 years.

"The Earth’s surface temperature is shown year by year (red bars) and approximately
decade by decade (black line, a filtered annual curve suppressing fluctuations below
near decadal time-scales).

There are uncertainties in the annual data (thin black whisker bars represent the 95%
confidence range) due to data gaps, random instrumental errors and uncertainties,
uncertainties in bias corrections in the ocean surface temperature data and also in
adjustments for urbanisation over the land. Over both the last 140 years and 100 years,
the best estimate is that the global average surface temperature has increased by 0.6 ±
0.2°C".Based upon Chapter 2, Figure 2.7c

Figure 1b: Variations of the Earth’s surface temperature over the last millennium.

The year by year (blue curve) and 50 year average (black curve) variations of the
average surface temperature of the Northern Hemisphere for the past 1000 years have been
reconstructed from “proxy” data calibrated against thermometer data (see list of the
main proxy data in the diagram).

The 95% confidence range in the annual data is represented by the grey region. These
uncertainties increase in more distant times and are always much larger than in the
instrumental record due to the use of relatively sparse proxy data. Nevertheless the
rate and duration of warming of the 20th century has been much greater than in any of
the previous nine centuries. Similarly, it is
likely7 that the 1990s have been the
warmest decade and 1998 the warmest year of the millennium. [Based upon
Chapter 2,
Figure 2.20]